The Manchester-born politician collapsed and suffered two
seizures after he was allegedly punched during a fight with UKIP
defence spokesperson Mike Hookem. Hookem, UKIP's defence
spokesperson, denies the allegation.

Woolfe, the front-runner to succeed Diane James as UKIP leader,
was suffering from "life-threatening" injuries when he was taken
to a Strasbourg hospital. However, he is now on the road to
recovery.

In a statement released yesterday, Woolfe, who is
the pro-Brexit party's migration spokesperson, said: "The CT
scan has shown that there is no blood clot in the brain. At the
moment I am feeling brighter, happier, and smiling as ever.

"As a precaution, I am being kept in overnight awaiting secondary
tests to make sure everything is fine."

Woolfe offered to "reach out a hand of friendship" to
Hookem, who reportedly "made a few choice words" on speculation that
Woolfe was considering defecting to Theresa May's ruling
Tory party before entering the upcoming leadership
contest.